Rottrevore were cool, Reverie show lots of potential, Katechon were an odd mixture but interesting, Lantern and Into Darkness are great on record but need more gigs/rehearsing under their belt to be convincing live._________________A nobody in a world of somebodies
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obscure infinity was pretty real!! from the one song that i saw!
real nice fest this year, maybe best for me! even though i didnt check so many bands, but lots of drinking and weed. too bad i missed some bands but overall fine occasion. we we're going for the zoo on monday but it was raining so we went to the aquarium, and . . . plz don't go therre it's bad._________________CATHOLIC WITCHES ARRIVED IN A GROVE..
OUR BODY A SHRINE TO THE PAGAN OVERLORD..

Tribulation were incredibly good! Although the new album is much softer than the first one, the music was very aggressive when performed live. I almost knew the concert would be great even before they started playing, because Swedes simply know how to entertain. They're putting on a show for the audience, not just standing there like idiots. Especially the guitar player on the left was damn cool, with his androgynous image, standing in front of the big fan, with his 1970's shirt fluttering in the wind. It was a real larger than life rock concert!

Alchemyst was for me one of the least interesting bands at the festival. Don't get me wrong, all concerts were good! That's the magic of Kill-Town Death Fest, no other festivals can match up to this (and I've been to many festivals worldwide). But Alchemyst was perhaps the band with the least death metal edge in their sound when playing live. There were several other bands playing a mix of death and black metal, like Katechon, which I thought worked much better in the KTDF setting. Alchemyst would probably be more suitable on a pure black metal festival. But others might disagree on this!_________________http://www.noposersplease.comhttp://www.diskord.nethttp://www.myspace.com/grindcrushernorwayTrade list

Especially the guitar player on the left was damn cool, with his androgynous image, standing in front of the big fan, with his 1970's shirt fluttering in the wind.

I saw Tribulation a few weeks ago at a festival here in Belgium with some friends who weren't familiar with the band. I have to admit we weren't that close to the stage, but my jaw still dropped when I heard two of them say they'd do the female guitar player. Even when I pointed out it was a bloke they wouldn't believe me, and in the end I won some free beers in a bet when they looked it up on metal archives...

Tribulation were incredibly good! Although the new album is much softer than the first one, the music was very aggressive when performed live. I almost knew the concert would be great even before they started playing, because Swedes simply know how to entertain. They're putting on a show for the audience, not just standing there like idiots. Especially the guitar player on the left was damn cool, with his androgynous image, standing in front of the big fan, with his 1970's shirt fluttering in the wind. It was a real larger than life rock concert!

Alchemyst was for me one of the least interesting bands at the festival. Don't get me wrong, all concerts were good! That's the magic of Kill-Town Death Fest, no other festivals can match up to this (and I've been to many festivals worldwide). But Alchemyst was perhaps the band with the least death metal edge in their sound when playing live. There were several other bands playing a mix of death and black metal, like Katechon, which I thought worked much better in the KTDF setting. Alchemyst would probably be more suitable on a pure black metal festival. But others might disagree on this!

Yeah I can definitely see that about Alchemyst. Still, killer as hell band, and in the right setting, I think they would kill live. They have a sort of ritualistic thing going, which is really cool.